Vlad,
That might be true from a philosophical naturalists perspective.
But why should the rest of us buy it?
Even allowing for your redefinition of the term “philosophical naturalism”, have you ever come across anyone who actually argues for it? Fun as it is watching you tilt at a windmill entirely of your own making, what’s the point of it?
That might be true from a philosophical naturalists perspective.
But why should the rest of us buy it?
If by “it” you also mean your personal redefinition of the term, no-one I know of does “buy it”. Or propose it.
God has been described as the creator and maintainer of the universe whose existence is independent of it's creation.
“God” has been described as many things, but by all means throw that one into the mix if you want to.
You have been noted as finding simulated universe reasonable and therefore you logically have to find God reasonable.
It’s “plausible” rather than “reasonable”, and you still fundamentally fail to understand that a simulated universe would not have to entail the notion that everything that could possibly be actually is. It requires no such thing, and if you think it does then you'd have to include leprechauns too. So...?
And Leprechauns have erroneously been likened to God having all his powers when I have informed them that they are small people dressed in green
Can you find an example of anyone ever doing that, or is it just another of your straw men? What actually happens of course is entirely different from that – it’s the
reductio ad absurdum, something you’ve either never grasped or never been honest about.
Poor analogy since Leprechauns are small people dressed in green…
And needles and haystacks are different objects too. “God” and leprechauns are still a perfectly good analogy though when the
point of the analogy is that the same argument can lead equally to either conclusion.
…and Stranger at one time thought that proposing a creator of the universe could, if shaved of ''religion'', be a reasonable proposition.
No, so far as I recall he was correcting you about your conjecture “creator” leading to deism but not to theism, which requires many more assumptions.
He was unable to say why we should shave away religion nor why being a creator of the universe was not itself a religious notion.
No he wasn’t, and you should “shave away religion” when your argument (even if it wasn’t wrong) would lead to deism but not to theism.
A lie doesn’t become less of a lie because you repeat it. You do know that right?